Wheatsheaf Lectures – New Ecologies of Sound.

In the first three months of 2011 a series of four talks will explore 
the nexus of
‘sound’, ‘noise’ and ‘music’ from a variety of disciplinary 
perspectives. In the
context of a bourgeoning sensitivity to the auditory across a range of
disciplines, these talks will consider how particular formulations of these
interdependent notions transform ‘sound’ from an isolated attribute of 
sensory
experience into a embedded, ecological means of world-inhabitation.

As has been an ongoing tradition for the London Consortium, the series 
will be
held in the Wheatsheaf pub (25 Rathbone Place, W1T 1DG) – a favourite of
1930s writers such as George Orwell and Dylan Thomas – a venue that will 
also
provide a great opportunity for continuing informal discussion following 
each
paper.

The current series has been organised by London Consortium and Birkbeck
College postgraduate students Matt Clements and Jonathan Tee, and is also
associated with the London Sound Seminar. It is free and open to all.

If you would like more information about these events please contact: 
Jonathan
Tee ([email protected]) or Matt Clements ([email protected]).

Wednesday, 19th January, 7pm

Eric Clarke – Musical Meaning: an Ecological Approach

Eric Clarke went to the University of Sussex to read for a degree in 
Neurobiology,
and graduated with a degree in Music. In 2007 he was elected to the Heather
Professorship of Music at Oxford, and is currently an Associate Director 
of the
AHRC Research Centre for the History and Analysis of Recorded Music. For 10
years he was a member of the improvising string quartet The Lapis 
Quartet. Eric
Clarke’s research embraces a number of areas within the psychology of 
music,
music theory, and musical aesthetics/semiotics. He is the author of a 
recent
monograph on listening (Ways of Listening. An Ecological Approach to the
Perception of Musical Meaning OUP, 2005) and co-editor of a volume on
Empirical Musicology (OUP, 2004). He has also published more than 60 papers
and book chapters on music related topics.

Tuesday, 1st February, 7pm

David Toop – ‘A Sinister Practice: The Uncanny Space Between Improvisation,
Composition, Live Performance and the Digital Domain’

David Toop is a composer/musician, author and curator who has worked in
many fields of sound art and music, including improvisation, sound 
installations,
field recordings, pop music production, music for television, theatre 
and dance.
He has published five books, including Ocean of Sound, Haunted Weather, and
Sinister Resonance: The Mediumship of the Listener. He has released 
eight solo
albums, including Screen Ceremonies, Black Chamber and Sound Body, As a
critic he has written for many publications, including The Wire, The Face,
Leonardo Music Journal and Bookforum. Exhibitions he has curated include 
Sonic
Boom at the Hayward Gallery, London, Playing John Cage at Arnolfini, 
Bristol,
and Blow Up at Flat-Time House, London. Visiting Professor at the 
University of
the Arts London, he is a Senior Research Fellow at London College of
Communication.

Wednesday, 16th February, 7pm

Henry Stobart – ‘Saturating the Soundscape?

Conceptualizing Sound and Silence in the Andes and Beyond’

Henry Stobart is Reader in Music/Ethnomusicology in the Music Department of
Royal Holloway, University of London. His research has principally 
focused on
indigenous music of the Bolivian Andes; examined from a wide range of
perspectives. His books include the monograph Music and the Poetics of
Production in the Bolivian Andes(Ashgate, 2006) and several edited volumes:
The New (Ethno)musicologies (Scarecrow, 2008), Knowledge and Learning in 
the
Andes: Ethnographic Perspectives (co-edited with Rosaleen Howard; Liverpool
University Press, 2002), and Sound (coedited with Patricia Kruth; Cambridge
University Press, 2000). He is currently working on a monograph 
provisionally
entitled Digital Indigeneity and has been invited to write a theoretical 
volume on
ethnomusicological perspectives to Music and Environment.

Tuesday, 1st March, 7pm

Karin Bijsterveld – Car Sound Ecologies: A History of Listening to and 
in the
Automobile

Karin Bijsterveld is historian and professor in the Department of Science,
Technology and Society Studies, Maastricht University. She is author of
Mechanical Sound: Technology, Culture and Public Problems of Noise in the
Twentieth Century (MIT Press 2008), and co-editor (with José van Dijck) 
of Sound
Souvenirs: Audio Technologies, Memory and Cultural Practices (AUP 2009). 
With
Trevor Pinch, she is working on The Oxford Handbook of Sound Studies. 
She has
recently been awarded with a NWO-VICI grant for the project Sonic 
Skills: Sound
and Listening in Science, Technology and Medicine, 1920s-now.


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